Because history is fun and love is worth working for

Tag: Bluestocking Belles Collection

Soldier’s wife a credit to English womanhood

If it sometimes seems that The Teatime Tattler has nothing but scandal and bad news, then do not blame us, dear reader. Such stories are sadly plentiful. But every now and then a story comes across our desk that touches even our calloused hearts, and that reassures us that courage, perseverance and loyalty still exist in this war-weary world.

Such is the story of Maggie Parker and her children. Picture, if you will, the daughter of one of our brave soldiers, a sergeant, who died in the service of God and his country. Maggie, a good and modest girl for all that she had been raised by her father in the army’s train, was told to choose a husband. And quite right, too, dear reader. The army is no place for a virtuous single girl with neither father nor husband.

Dear reader, Maggie was fortunate. There was a corporal she liked, a William Parker, and he like her, and so they were married, and for a time they were blissfully happy, even in the midst of war. Their son was born, and named for his father, and little Billy grew and prospered. Never was a little family so content.

But war is a dreadful thing, and when the French were driven from Spain and Will’s regiment were given their orders to march after them and end the long war, Billy had one of those childhood illnesses that are short duration but terrifying to parents. Maggie, who was also ill as her second confinement approached, remained behind.

And that, dear reader, was the last this gallant lady heard of her dear husband.

By the time she, her son, and her new daughter were well enough to follow him to France, the peace had been signed, his regiment had been sent elsewhere, and nobody could – or, perhaps, would – tell her whether Corporal William Parker was still in the land of the living.

Maggie returned to Spain, and worked to save money to travel to England, where she hoped to find Will’s mother. A determined woman can conquer mountains, and Maggie made it to England, but on the way she found a difficulty. Parker is a common name, and the only thing she knew about Mrs. Parker’s address was the name of the village. Ashton. How many villages are there in England with the name Ashton? Twenty or more, spread across the land.

But that did not deter Maggie Parker. She arrived in Portsmouth, purchased a wheelbarrow, set her baggage and her son in it, strapped her daughter to her back, and set off to find her mother-in-law.

Spare a thought for this gallant woman, the flower of English womanhood, marching the roads of England with all the determination of a conquering army.

Dear reader, I am certain you join with all of us at The Teatime Tattler in wishing her God Speed, and a Happy Ending.

***

Maggie’s Wheelbarrow in Merry Belles

 

A year ago, Maggie’s husband marched out of Spain with his regiment to invade France. She hasn’t heard from him since, and when she followed him, the battles were over and his regiment was gone. Letters to the army, him, and his family have brought no answers, so she and her children are off to find him, even if they have to walk the length and breadth of England.

(Merry Belles is a Bluestocking Belles collection.)

Smugglers, Ghosts, and Highwaymen…

Dearest Readers,

This humble publication usually offers the latest in society on-dits, rumors, and, dare I say, salacious scandal.

Today, however, we report on far more serious subjects.

It has come to your humble publisher’s attention that matters most shocking of a criminal nature, (and possibly a supernatural one!), are occurring along the road to one of our island’s most illustrious seaside towns. It has come to our attention that Bow Street has dispatched an officer to look into these matters. By good fortune we have received a copy of said officer’s first report:

It seems that I am off to the seaside. Larcenous Lucy, as some of the wits here at the Office have taken to calling her, is working the London to Brighton road. I’ve been told to look into a highwayman problem while I am there. There’s someone plaguing both the main highway and some of the lesser roads. The local dignitaries have posted a reward, so that would be a nice bonus. My colleagues have also been joking that smugglers and ghosts abound in the region, and that I might collect some of those while I am there. I told them, I shall leave the smugglers to the excise officers and ghosts to the duly authorized ministers of the church.

Dear Readers, if you have any further information to provide, please write directly to The Teatime Tattler’s offices. We will be sure to share your report with Bow Street.

Love’s Perilous Road

Travelers, a house party, smugglers, spies—and a mysterious highwayman. Who is the infamous Captain Moonlight? And how many lives will he change–for good or for ill?

Sir Westcott Steals a Heart, by Alina K. Field

Sir Westcott Twisden didn’t know he wanted to marry until the tallest lady he’d ever met crossed his path.

One Good Wager Leads to Another, by Barbara Monajem

A young widow escaping her father. A spy in disguise. A long-ago but never-forgotten kiss.

Charred Hope, by Caroline Warfield

A fool threw her and her miniature away. A wiser man treasures them both.

Stolen Kisses, by Cerise DeLand

He kissed her once. Ruined her, too! Years later, he’s done it again.

Love by Moonlight, by Elizabeth Ellen Carter

By daylight, he’s a gentleman. By moonlight, justice is served.

A Bend in the Road, by Jude Knight

Can a grand lady and a washed-up sailor find a future together?

My Gift to You, by Mary Lancaster

A rocky marriage and too many secrets… Is their love doomed?

A Duke In Peril, by Meara Platt

Lady Florence’s life is upended when she finds a handsome wounded soldier on the road.

Forever and Always, by Rue Allyn

Lord Fontus shares a secret with Lady Deoiridh. Revealing the secret could be fatal. Or it could lead them to forever and always.

Falling Into You, by Sherry Ewing

Sometimes a memory is hard to forget… After a year’s absence, is Milton too late to win Josephine back?

Preorder today for the October 31, 2025 Release! https://books2read.com/u/mqx0W6

 

Persian Princess in Gypsy Thief Scandal

Zahrah snorted at the newspaper her brother had handed her, and threw it on the table. The Teatime Tattler had the headline completely wrong. “I am not Persian, nor a princess, nor Romanichal, nor a thief,” she told him. “Also, there was no scandal.”

“Actually,” Jamal retorted, as he helped himself to breakfast from the sideboard, “the last bit is correct. The article is about the fall of the House of Strickland, which is the scandal du jour. All of the papers have been covering the separate arrests and subsequent legal cases against father and son. The Teatime Tattler has done a bit of digging around and uncovered your role in precipitating the collapse of their house of cards.”

Zahrah forbore to point out that she had not invited her brother to breakfast. He would merely retort that he knew how much she missed him. “They have written about me?” She picked up the paper again to scan the article.

“They’ve changed a few details, probably because the duke made sure the papers knew there’d by consequences if they brought you into it.”

Ah yes. They had called her Sarah Joseph, and made those ridiculous claims that were in the headline. The overall outline was true, though. The innocent governess, persecuted by the eldest son of the house who then stole from her. Her eviction when she complained. The trials of her attempt to reach Birmingham, culminating in her arrest at the behest of a pack of drunken yokels who insisted that she must be a gypsy, and therefore a thief. The lies that saw the man who was now her husband arrested with her.

Indeed, thanks to the machinations of the Stricklands, she and Simon had had time to fall in love and decide to marry. “God closes the door but opens the window,” as her father was fond of saying.

Well. Let the Tattler have its story. It was nothing to do with Zahrah Marshall, wife of a Birmingham jewellery. Zahrah, whose father was from Egypt, and who was the vizier and best friend of an English duke. The duke’s first wife had, indeed been a Persian princess. In fact, if one knew the backstory, and interpreted the headline in that light, it wasn’t too far from the truth.

“I suppose ‘Protege of Persian Princess Victim of Gypsy Thief Allegations’ would not be nearly as exciting a headline,” she said. “Eat up, Jamal. Since you are here, you can escort me for a ride in the park. Simon is visiting a possible client, and I would like the company.”

***

Zahrah ibnit Yousef (ibnit means daughter of) is the  heroine of my story in Belles & Beaux, due for release on 15th December. Find out more about this story and the other seven, and preorder, on our projects page.

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